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Mubarak and Me

I grew up in Egypt and Hosni Mubarak was my uncle. To be honest, I think he was an uncle, father or grandfather to the 66 percent of Egyptians who are under 30. In fact, even if you were older than him, you probably still saw Mubarak as a fatherly figure. I wasn't born in Egypt. I arrived as an 18-year old Arabic student and I left a jaded Middle East correspondent hitting 30. But it was difficult to avoid the effects of an extremely well-crafted state propaganda machine that relied as much on the threat of thinly veiled force as it did on subtle manipulation.

Uncle Mubarak ran a very tight ship. It wasn't that he was mean. It was more that he didn't want you to hurt yourself in your youthful exuberance. Just to make sure you knew that he cared, there were quite a few pictures of him looking like the kind yet tough teacher you wish you had in school. Mubsy, as we used to call him at work, didn't look like those other leaders who liked to see their photos all over the place. He didn't have Hafez al Asad's dead-eye menace or Vladamir Putin's unspoken snarl. No, Mubarak looked like he was there for you. The problem was that he was everywhere, he wasn't going anywhere and, in the end, it was clear he wasn't actually helping.

In the beginning, Mubarak was more than an uncle. In fact, he was more than a man. He was somewhere between the Queen and the Prophet Mohammad (imagine being British Muslim). Mubarak represented Egyptian pride. He was the former airforce hero. He was a steady hand and a cool eye. He was ibn el-balad (son of the soil). At the same time, he was blameless. If something was wrong, it couldn't be his fault. Even if he said he was ultimately responsible, you wanted to say; "No, no. How could it be you? But thank you for manning up to shoulder the burden. I would have expected nothing less." Mubarak was familiar like a family member, but, at the same time, so much better than we could ever hope to be.

As a badly behaved 19-year old student, I and three friends decided to get our revenge on a tight-of-fist-yet-wide-of-girth landlord who had told us he was keeping our deposit while boasting of his generosity in the same breath. As we left his flat we deposited empty cans of tuna everywhere and opened the front door to the stray cats that inhabited the building. We spent three nights in a Cairo jail for our trouble but were released uncharged by a senior police officer who made sure we knew we were lucky to have been arrested in a country ruled by a man as benevolent as the great Hosni Mubarak. The officer was right in a way. Uncle Mubarak liked you if you were a wealthy foreigner with the right passport. I wouldn't have been so lucky if I had been one of the poor Egyptians beaten in front of me with rubber hoses. And, I definitely did not want to be the man in the next cell over whose blood I saw in thick pools on the concrete floor.

In reality, Mubarak didn't have it easy. He was the fourth leader of the Egypt's Free Officers' regime which came to power in a military coup against a constitutional monarchy in 1952. Egypt has a long history of being at the forefront of Middle East affairs and its people have a strong sense of pride. Political squabbling, corrupt politicians and disastrous war against the newly formed state of Israel motivated the middle class military professionals to remove their king, and British influence along with him. The coup's leader, Gamal Abdul Nasser, made Egypt the focal point of Arab hopes and earned their eternal admiration. In reality, he achieved little. His successor, Anwar el-Sadat switched the regime from the pro-Soviet to the pro-Western camp during the cold war. Sadat realised post-independence Egypt's central problem; it's economic muscle didn't match its ambition.

To be the power it wanted to be, Egypt needed a stable political system based on rule by consensus. This would allow it to build a state machinery that would allow government to be effective and nimble enough to generate economic growth. With a strong body politic and economy, Egypt would have the independence and resources it needed to project its strength. Egypt's military leaders, however, didn't see it that way. Their phobia of political competition acquired by their experience of the constitutional monarchy they replaced prodded them to the conclusion that Egyptians were not ready for democracy. They were too "unruly" or "hot blooded" (often said with a hint of pride). Once the rulers had adopted a colonial view of their fellow countrymen, they replicated their mode of rule. Members of their own caste - other military men - were the only ones to be trusted with positions of power and authority.

The Free Officer regime was built on the tacit understanding that the officers would restore Egyptian pride. However, the problem with a rule-by-military-clique approach to government is that it does little for long-term development. Sadat's solution to this problem was to leverage Egypt's strategic value to the United States as a source of income.

Mubarak, when he took over after Sadat's assassination, decided to double down. He saw stability and security as paramount, with his continued rule as vital to both. But, he faced a conundrum. How could Nasser's Egypt be dependent for its survival on US aid and western tourist dollars? A more inventive leader might have found another way, but slow and steady bomber pilot Mubarak decided on bluff and relied on Egyptian pride to make it work. Under no circumstances, he seemed to have decided, would greater freedoms be risked.

The disaster for Egypt was that the relationship with the US and the collective voluntary hypnotism worked - for a while. Much needed reforms to the state were avoided through reliance on aid, grants, debt forgiveness (after the first US-Iraq war) and US inclination to look the other way. The civil service was not stream lined, nor were workers' pay increased. All the while, corruption stifled the growth of small business (the backbone of a successful economy, corroded the state's ability to educate its younger generation or even keep its citizen's safe when they used public transport

Mubarak stifled any dissent by blurring the line between loyalty to him and patriotism while creating a state that totally extricated any sense of civic participation or responsibility. There were no elected town councils, provincial assemblies or trade unions with any real power. The only public bodies there were became vehicles for patronage with shady businessmen or prominent families vying and bribing to be seen to have Mubarak's stamp of approval. All the while, politics was stage-managed and Mubarak was destined to win. The result was a Frankenstein country - a powerful and influential army and a massive internal security force. While opposition politicians had no experience or knowledge of what it would take to run the country, and the political culture didn't differentiate between party, state and country.

In my book The Long Struggle (shameless plug) I mention an episode when I met Egyptian journalist friends at the journalist union in Cairo. One was from the opposition Nasserite party but argued vehemently that Mubarak's party should be the only one allowed to exist (he just wanted it to change its policies a little). During one election, I remember an eccentric old man who ran the right-wing Umma (Nation) Party say at a press conference that he would take off his shoe and beat anyone who didn't vote for Mubarak.

It wasn't all based on subtle subterfuge. The regime also used coercion and force. The closest I came to being shot was not in Iraq, Gaza, the West Bank or Darfur. It was on the grounds of a leafy Cairo villa that served as the HQ of the liberal Wafd Party. The leader Nomaan Goma was popularly understood to be a government stooge who spent all his time subverting any party activity aimed against the regime. He sometimes appeared on television sitting meekly near the president at the odd public occasion. One Saturday, the party had decided to oust Gomaa but he was holed up in the HQ with hired thugs and refused to leave. The thugs were lent by the government. When party members started banging on the door, the thugs fired from the other side. A bullet whizzed past me at chest height.

The system of government Mubarak inherited but then perpetuated contributed to his undoing. But the consequences of his method of rule and the acquiescence of his allies will be felt by Egyptians for some time to come. Mubarak often said he was working towards a gradual democratic transformation. But his actions did not bare out his words. Any credible secular party trying to establish itself was routinely denied permission. Parties that already existed were subverted from the inside. Secular political leaders like Ayman Nour were harassed and jailed on trumped up charges. Islamist politicians - even moderate centrists - were subjected to military courts and jailed by the thousands. Elections were regularly rigged quite blatantly, and often pretty badly (with journalists covering them often getting arrested). Secular middle class women who demonstrated in support of independent judges and secular democratic reform were sexually assaulted. All this generated little complaint from the United States.

Sometimes, the United States itself became an indirect target of the regime's spin. The fact that human rights activist Saad Eddin Ibrahim had accepted foreign (including US) funds for his centre and had US citizenship was used to insinuate allegations of espionage. Every now and again, the security services would arrest gay men. The leaked details would suggest they were "imitating US lifestyles" and the state had acted to uphold Islamic values. I often heard Mubarak giving impromptu Arabic interviews to local journalists where he would allege that the Muslim Brotherhood was supported by the United States to destabilise the country.

Some of the US and UK coverage of the anti-Mubarak demonstrations happening now suggests that extremists are waiting to take over. Considering Mubarak's manipulation of feelings towards the United States and suppression of moderate Islamists and secularists, it's a surprise that the demonstrators are not all extremist Jihadis.

However, the legacy of Mubarak's rule means that there are few leaders with any of the contacts, stature and relationships that would allow government to function if Mubarak's regime was removed root and branch. Few people outside the ruling circle even have any idea of what the country's real financial situation is. Those who demand that the peace treaty with Israel be cancelled have no idea what part it plays in keeping their country solvent.

There is hope. The Egyptians who turned up to prevent the looting of the Cairo Museum, the popular committees, the Muslim-Christian cooperation show glimmers of hope that Egyptians - despite the best efforts of three decades of Mubarak - have retained the civic values that will be vital for their future.

Egypt, Mubarak, protests

15 comments

WOW It's the best post I've

WOW

It's the best post I've read here in a long long time.
Very moving.

Thank you.

Word. I would love to hear

Word. I would love to hear your opinion on the MB, "Londonstani". From what Ive read (including Lynch) they dont seem at all like AQ fanatics.

I remember hearing all about

I remember hearing all about the fish flat, although I was in Damascus at the time. Happy days.

Back on topic-ish - surely moral panics were a regular part of Egyptian life, if one read the papers? I seem to remember one involving black metal-loving satanists back in '97 (one of its odder effects being a newspaper photo of one Sonia O. smoking a shisha in Ramadan, eyes blacknastied out SAS-style..).

Here's hoping that you're right about the newfound civic pride - it's rather strange to watch people being unironically patriotic on TV.

Never thought Id say this,

Never thought Id say this, but here is a sane Jpost comment: http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Op-EdContributors/Article.aspx?id=206123

In basic, its that the US should counter the image of US made teargas cannisters with providing ready-meals for the poor through Egyptian military to show good faith in order to buffer the inevitable backlash once the bastards gone.

>In basic, its that the US

>In basic, its that the US should counter the image of US made teargas cannisters with providing ready-meals for the poor through Egyptian military to show good faith in order to buffer the inevitable backlash once the bastards gone.

Rivers of gratitude will flow, just like in Pakistan, where we've dumped who knows how much money into humanitarian aid.

January 26th, 2,000 -ehda

January 26th, 2,000 -ehda 'ashr,
there was a riot on the streets,
tell me where hell were you?
You were sittin' home watchin' your TV,
while the Sahibis were paticipatin' in some anarchy.

First spot we hit it was Citystars.
I finally got all the Khan El-Khalili I can't afford.
With red lights flashin' time to retire,
And then Khaled turned Citystars into a structure fire.

Next stop we hit it was the music shop,
It only took one brick to make that window drop.
Finally we got our own Darbuka.
Where do you think I got this Lauta that you're hearing today?
Hey!

(call fire, respond Shell station.
Al’Haram in Giza,
its uhh flamin up good.
10-4 Al’Haram in Giza)

When we returned to al bayt to unload everything,
It dawned on me that I need new home furnishings.
So once again we filled the sayara until it was full,
since that day my livin' room's been more comfortable.

Cause everybody in the mellah has had it up to here,
It's getting harder and harder and harder each and every year.

Some kids went in a store with their mema,
I saw her when she came out she was gettin some swaddles.

They said it was for the Brotherhood,
they said it was for Al-Banna,
and not for the royal and nationalist man.

But if you look at the streets it wasn't about Hosni Mubarak,
It's bout this f--ked up situation and these f--ked up Amned Daula and Moochabarat Police.
It's about coming up and staying on top
and screamin' 187 on a -------- ------- ----------.
It's not written on the paper it's on the wall.
(units, units be advised there ….* squelch - static)

Let it burn, wanna let it burn,
wanna let it burn, wanna wanna let it burn

(I'm feelin' Free and Happy)

Riots on the streets of Ma’adi,
oh, Riots on the streets of Nasr City,
oh, on the streets of Heliopolis,
mmm, and Old Cairo (Rhoda Island),
Riots on the streets of Garden City
(Ramses Station, Midan Tahrir),
(Let it burn, let it burn),Zamalek Gezira (Mohandeseen, Dokki),
Citadel – Islamic Cairo, (Oh, ya let it burn, wont'cha wont'cha let it burn),

(Any units assist structure fire, and numerous subjects looting…. (* no response - radio silence).

It was about the poor and

It was about the poor and oppressed, rising up. Nothing more.

Don't try to make it out to more than what it is / was.

"There were no elected town

"There were no elected town councils, provincial assemblies or trade unions with any real power. "

Oh Yes Hosni blew it. Then again, we have an accurate description of the region and indeed much of the world, and history itself. Freedom is rare. And usually fails.

You don't get Real Democracy with true freedoms and the rule of Law from the French or Russian Revolutions.
You get the strongest most disciplined group most positioned to take power - the Bolsheviks from Kerensky for instance.
Or the Ayatollah's from Bani Sadr. Or the Muslim Brotherhood from El-Baredi.

Exactly what were our choices in 1981? Or 2001? Or for that matter with Iran and the Shah?

We were taught in grammar school that our Liberties and our Democracy didn't begin in 1776. They began with the Magna Carta. And Parliament. The Founders rose because they were being denied their rights as Englishmen. Most of them had their own Constitutions or Charters - and representation - from the Colonial Days Day one in the 15th Century. It takes centuries. Rome and the Greek city states took how long to get Democracy or Republics? Egypt may have strong civic traditions and a comparatively high rate of education (good) but where are the democratic traditions, the tradition of elections, the rule of Law, appreciation of individual Liberties (rights)?

Muslim Brotherhood vs El-Baredi and the April 6th movement? Edge = Muslim Brotherhood.

I really liked this post.

I really liked this post. I've had you on my RSS feed for a while and this is by far my favorite post.

The overstayer, email me.

The overstayer, email me. amilkhan@me.com. Londonstani

Interesting....reminds me of

Interesting....reminds me of my Uncle "O".

Londonstani, your right there is hope.

One of my buddies rumbled with General Buck Naked, that was before Blahyi got Religion....
.................. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RpTV9TZdjg8

Another guy I worked with grew up with this Uncle.
.................. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZQ4pSsabnRA&playnext=1&list=PL5AF916B6D77...

Ruff neighborhoods and you think Anacostia is bad. Makes you want to step back and ask yourself what form of government works in a place where no one can agree on anything except religion or power.

Guys....coming up with

Guys....coming up with definitions like this is like saying Gays can not be in the military. You might as will be draggin your finger nails down a chaulk board.

You don't get out of the belt way too much do you? You know who you are. It is not Egypt, but it is civil rights. Picking the definitions that you want to get what you want is like saying that twitter does not exist, use the Marconi. You and your new executive order.

You don't want to win in 2012 do you, we stand together on all issues.


In particular, the working group examined participation in and popularity of practical shooting
events as governed by formal rules, such as those of the United States Practical Shooting
Association (USPSA) and International Practical Shooting Confederation (IPSC), to determine
whether it was appropriate to consider these events a “sporting purpose” under § 925(d)(3).
While the number of members reported for USPSA is similar to the membership for other
shotgun shooting organizations,6 the working group ultimately determined that it was not
appropriate to use this shotgun study to determine whether practical shooting is “sporting” under
§ 925(d)(3). A change in ATF’s position on practical shooting has potential implications for rifle
and handgun classifications as well. Therefore, the working group believes that a more thorough
and complete assessment is necessary before ATF can consider practical shooting as a generally
recognized sporting purpose.


The working group agreed with the previous studies in that the activity known as “plinking” is
“primarily a pastime” and could not be considered a recognized sport for the purposes of
importation.7 Because almost any firearm can be used in that activity, such a broad reading of
“sporting purpose” would be contrary to the congressional intent in enacting section 925(d)(3).
For these reasons, the working group recommends that plinking not be considered a sporting
purpose. However, consistent with past court decisions and Congressional intent, the working
group recognized hunting and other more generally recognized or formalized competitive events
similar to the traditional shooting sports of trap, skeet, and clays.

sport (spôrt)

noun

1. any activity or experience that gives enjoyment or recreation; pastime; diversion
2. such an activity, esp. when competitive, requiring more or less vigorous bodily exertion and carried on, sometimes as a profession, according to some traditional form or set of rules, whether outdoors, as football, golf, etc., or indoors, as basketball, bowling, etc.
3. fun or play

This is a valuable post by

This is a valuable post by Londonstani.

It seems to me he may give Sadat a little too much credit for having thought through Egypt's economic situation and future. Sadat was very sophisticated about geopolitics, and understood clearly that Egypt could not afford to bear by itself the cost of a perpetual Arab war against Israel. I doubt, though, that the evolution of his government's relationship with the United States was driven by similarly sophisticated calculations as to how Egypt could overcome the mismatch between its economy and its ambitions. More than anything, Sadat seemed to want American aid as a means of bolstering his position within an Egyptian military he saw as a potential source of political challenges, and secondly to cement a relationship with the United States as insurance against Soviet troublemaking within Egypt and in the Mideast region. The last concern in particular seems quaint nowadays, but during Sadat's life the Arab cause vis a vis Israel was aligned more closely with the Soviet Union than with militant Islam as it is today.

The other side of the world

The other side of the world (my people) saw all this quite differently. College students in the 1980s in the U.S. in the fields of economics, international relations, even anthropology were all being told about the many job opportunities available to those willing to travel and work in friendly countries in the Middle East, South America, Southeast Asia, etc.

Around the same time it seemed that unusually high number of young Saudis and Egyptians were getting college degrees in the United States. (Large quantities of Afghani hashish were also showing up in California, but that's a different story).

The jobs that college grads were pointed towards involved working for economic consulting firms or the larger corporate interests that they served, and also government diplomat jobs with the State Department.

Now, the cash flows that made those jobs possible in the Middle East originated in the U.S. aid programs and also as part of Saudi handouts to their poorer cousins (including Mubarak). However, the aid wasn't used to rebuild Cairo, create domestic infrastructure, or anything like that - it was used for various mega-projects that recycled most of the cash back to the corporate entities that built such projects - the consultants and engineering firms. Since the aid was in the form of loans, this also created a huge debt load that the Egyptian government had to pay out - a nice cherry for Wall Street.

A small upper crust in Egyptian society did benefit from this, as did a lot of U.S. college grads - but the real beneficiaries were a handful of top-end players who made massive fortunes off these deals, entering the ranks of billionaires as a result. The real losers were the Egyptian people, and also the American people - because let's face it, these were all crony-based insider deals that didn't require much skill or talent to negotiate. Sleaziness was a more useful attribute than real skills, and that was how one rose through the ranks. (This also accounts for the increasingly shoddy state of American science and technology, by the way).

This debt-aid train is coming to a shuddering halt. It's all gone out of kilter, as was inevitable, considering the scale of corruption involved - all built on one factor: Middle Eastern oil.

The real threat, as seen by the nervousness at the World Economic Forum in Davos, is that a new democratic regime in Egypt will come to the obvious conclusion that they are unable to service the debt any longer, and will default on it. The economic situation for the average Egyptian already seems so bad that they won't notice the change - but the upper crust will take a big hit. We can guess who is lining up at Egyptian airports with sacks of loot right now, can't we?

That is just foolishness and paranoia. Wise Egyptians will not flee, but will instead stay and start the hard work of rebuilding the country from the ground up. It doesn't look like an Iranian-style revolution is in the cards - neither the autocrats nor the theocrats will win this.

Great response Gunboat.

Great response Gunboat. Concur and thanks for the info.

BTW- that Afghani hashish.... It's not uncommon for those in positions of power (corrupt officials) and/or the upper class (usually one in the same in many Foreign Country's) to be involved in the importation of drugs into the United States. It was going on way back then and still goes on today.

These same guys/girls are smart enough, after they make their big cash from the drug sales,they clean it by buying property, stocks, businesses, remit-it and other investments. With a few years, these snakes make even more money and it's not traced as well. Very Michael Corleone / Scarface / Mafia-ish...no?

Within most Bazaar / Market's in the Middle East, Africa, Asia and other 3rd world countries, you could more easily find a poster or photo of Al Pacino in one of his mob films, than the President of the country you would be in. Money = Power.... and just the opposite for many. Why is that?

Just how to you expect these rich foreign kids to buy their Mercedes Benz / other toys and attend college in the U.S.A? With US Foreign AID? ha...well...there's another story.

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